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  • Gern
    • May 2009
    • 9273

    #31
    Back to the SWG for a moment. Given that your wire is supposed to fit in a 1" diameter tube, how about if your wire is 0.6" diameter. Then only one will fit in the tube. But only one will fit if it's 0.999" diameter. There's a big difference between those wires, but does SWG say only one will fit so they are the same gauge?

    Duuhhh!

    Comment

    • Guest

      #32
      Originally posted by Tim Marlow
      Just like pure mathematics, of absolutely no use to anybody, but great fun to read.
      If you find mathematics great fun to read, you’re even weirder than me :tongue-out:

      Also, XKCD:


      Originally posted by Tim Marlow
      as always, vested interests and protectionism ruled over common sense.
      And the argument still used by Americans and elderly Brits the world over: “Too difficult, <random mess of units> is much easier (because I know it already)!”

      Originally posted by Dave Ward
      things that wouldn't mean anything to youngsters - log tables, sine tables, Naperian logarithms, steam tables slide rules, planometers, indicator cards & a lot more esoteric names & kit
      Not just youngsters (well, depending on your definition of youngster, I suppose …). I was in secondary school in the late 80s to early 90s, and we had none of those — instead, we had a Casio ƒx-82 (Or other scientific calculator of your choice, but my school recommended the ƒx-82.)

      Originally posted by Gern
      Given that your wire is supposed to fit in a 1" diameter tube, how about if your wire is 0.6" diameter. Then only one will fit in the tube. But only one will fit if it's 0.999" diameter. There's a big difference between those wires, but does SWG say only one will fit so they are the same gauge?
      I suppose there’s a rule that gauge is the number of wires that will fit tightly in the tube.

      Comment

      • dave
        • Nov 2012
        • 1844
        • Brussels

        #33
        For shotgun gauges; the gauge refers to the weight of a solid ball of lead that might fit perfectly in the bore of a shotgun, expressed as the inverse of said ball’s weight as a fraction of a pound. For example, the sphere of lead that perfectly fills the bore of a 12 gauge shotgun weighs 1/12 of a pound.

        Comment

        • Tim Marlow
          SMF Supporters
          • Apr 2018
          • 19027
          • Tim
          • Somerset UK

          #34
          Originally posted by Dave Ward
          Advances in knowkledge & especially computers mean most of these are consigned to history -
          Similar things that wouldn't mean anything to youngsters - log tables, sine tables, Naperian logarithms, steam tables slide rules, planometers, indicator cards & a lot more esoteric names & kit
          Dave
          Used the first four in a couple of jobs, but not for years.

          When a population of bacteria is growing without restraint it is known as being in log growth because when the optical density is plotted against time using log paper you get a straight line.

          Sine tables are very useful in trigonometry and I can’t really see how you can use a calculator to derive them if you don’t know how they work. Go on then Dave…..what was the nmenonic for remembering them?

          Steam tables were an easy way to determine if our fermentation kit was air free when being sterilised. If the temperature and the pressure correlated then there was no air present.

          Napier logs are better known as natural logs. Scientific calculators still have that function on them. I know the fx-82 has, I’ve still got mine somwhere. It was the recommended one for the Open University science course. It’s the Log e button as opposed to the Log 10 o….
          I think 2.303 x Log 10 = Log e, but I could be wrong. Can’t remember what I used them for now…..Logs are easy to explain, by the way. They are just the power to which you raise 10 to get the number in question.

          Oh, and I do enjoy maths. I’d rather solve quadratic equations than solve crosswords if I’m honest……

          Comment

          • Dave Ward
            • Apr 2018
            • 10549

            #35
            Originally posted by Tim Marlow
            the nmenonic for remembering them?
            All Silly Tom Cats! - positive quadrants!
            A planometer was a mechanical device for measuring the area under a curve - not unlike a precision pantograph. Indicator cards were the plot of pressure vs stroke in a 2-stroke engine - the planometer was used to give the power. You sometime see engine power des.cribed as ihp. or bhp. one being the theoretical power produced by the engine, the other being the useful power.. The indicator cards were taken by another fancy mechanical piece of kit - a Dobbie McInnes Indicator. Very tricky to use,- thankfully superseded by electric strain gauges - which would give continuous readings. The old machines only gave a power reading at one instant & it took about 20 minutes a cylinder to set up & record - not good, when you had 8 cylinders!
            Dave

            Comment

            • Tim Marlow
              SMF Supporters
              • Apr 2018
              • 19027
              • Tim
              • Somerset UK

              #36
              Nice one Dave. I was thinking of SOHCAHTOA, oops! Some Old Hairy Camels Are Hairier Than Others Are…….my maths teacher was a huge Southampton fan, so we had another that started Saints On High, but I cant remember the rest

              Comment

              • Jim R
                SMF Supporters
                • Apr 2018
                • 16029
                • Jim
                • Shropshire

                #37
                A friend of mine showed me the impressive model of Mount Everest that he had just built. I asked if it was to scale, he said, “No, it's just to look at”.

                Comment

                • boatman
                  • Nov 2018
                  • 14498
                  • christopher
                  • NORFOLK UK

                  #38
                  OH Well the brains have spoken (sigh)

                  Comment

                  • Guest

                    #39
                    Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                    Sine tables are very useful in trigonometry and I can’t really see how you can use a calculator to derive them if you don’t know how they work.
                    You type in the angle and press the [ICODE]SIN[/ICODE] button, or work out the sine from the sides of the triangle and press [ICODE]INV[/ICODE] followed by [ICODE]SIN[/ICODE]. You still need to know how to do it, but you don’t need tables to tell you which angle goes with which sine value.

                    Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                    Go on then Dave…..what was the nmenonic for remembering them?
                    In Dutch: SOSCASTOA — Sinus is Overstaand gedeeld door Schuin, Cosinus is Aanliggend gedeeld door Schuin, Tangens is Overstaand gedeeld door Aanliggend. Which looks to be the equivalent to your SOHCAHTOA, which I had never heard of before just now

                    Comment

                    • Tim Marlow
                      SMF Supporters
                      • Apr 2018
                      • 19027
                      • Tim
                      • Somerset UK

                      #40
                      Originally posted by Jakko
                      In Dutch: SOSCASTOA — Sinus is Overstaand gedeeld door Schuin, Cosinus is Aanliggend gedeeld door Schuin, Tangens is Overstaand gedeeld door Aanliggend. Which looks to be the equivalent to your SOHCAHTOA, which I had never heard of before just now :smiling3:
                      :thumb2:
                      Basically
                      Sine = Opposite over Hypotenuse,
                      Cosine = Adjacent over Hypotenuse,
                      and Tangent = Opposite over Adjacent.

                      Comment

                      • Guest

                        #41
                        Ah, yes, all those Latin-based terms that Dutch science replaced by ones easier to understand in the 17th century We know the hypothenuse simply as the sloping side of the triangle, for example. Or “physics” as, literally translated, “nature-knowledge”.

                        Comment

                        • Gern
                          • May 2009
                          • 9273

                          #42
                          Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                          Nice one Dave. I was thinking of SOHCAHTOA, oops! Some Old Hairy Camels Are Hairier Than Others Are…….my maths teacher was a huge Southampton fan, so we had another that started Saints On High, but I cant remember the rest
                          Beat me to it! I've actually got that tattoo'd on the inside of my eyelids - along with the general solution for quadratic equations. Came in very handy during exams!

                          Comment

                          • Tim Marlow
                            SMF Supporters
                            • Apr 2018
                            • 19027
                            • Tim
                            • Somerset UK

                            #43
                            Originally posted by Jakko
                            Ah, yes, all those Latin-based terms that Dutch science replaced by ones easier to understand in the 17th century :smiling3: We know the hypothenuse simply as the sloping side of the triangle, for example. Or “physics” as, literally translated, “nature-knowledge”.
                            Yes, but where’s the fun in that LOL…..
                            PS, Pythagoras was a Greek not a Roman LOL…..

                            Comment

                            • Gern
                              • May 2009
                              • 9273

                              #44
                              Originally posted by Jakko
                              If you find mathematics great fun to read, you’re even weirder than me :tongue-out:

                              Also, XKCD:



                              And the argument still used by Americans and elderly Brits the world over: “Too difficult, <random mess of units> is much easier (because I know it already)!”


                              Not just youngsters (well, depending on your definition of youngster, I suppose …). I was in secondary school in the late 80s to early 90s, and we had none of those — instead, we had a Casio ƒx-82 :smiling3: (Or other scientific calculator of your choice, but my school recommended the ƒx-82.)


                              I suppose there’s a rule that gauge is the number of wires that will fit tightly in the tube.
                              Calculators! At school! They hadn't been invented when I did my O-levels. I actually saw one of the first calculators to become available in this country when our A-level maths tutor bought one. It was about the size of a hardback airport novel. You know the ones. Those with a greek letter in the title and 950 pages of weapons specifications!

                              (Kids of today can't work out where the batteries are supposed to go so don't bother with them).

                              Comment

                              • Guest

                                #45
                                Originally posted by Tim Marlow
                                PS, Pythagoras was a Greek not a Roman
                                Oh, does the term come from him? Never knew that … Anyway, I meant most of those foreign words

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